Broquet!
This is another champion device - and it appears to be identical to Fuelstar in terms of its claims and method of not producing a real result.
There, however, some redeeming features to Broquet.
First off, Brqouet claims that you don't even need to put the device into a fuel line - you can just drop the pellets in the gas tank! Legendary. Why the hell didn't people notice how good the gas was back in the days when it was stored in tins? Dumb, 20th century bums!
Broquet makes the claim that the inventor of the fuel saver was a Henry Broquet and that it was used on Hurricane aircraft in Russia during WWII. This is an often-repeated fallacy. Fortunately, as my father was a highly-decorated aircraft carrier flight mechanic working on Hurricane aircraft in Russia-bound convoys during WWII, I will wait for evidence beyond the fairytale spun at Broquet. Claims are easy to make, but let's see whether Broquet can find any authentic evidence to back up this assertion of theirs.
Even better, one of Broquet's main distributors - a company called VR Fuel Savers has a web page which will enter the annals of misdirection and outright bullshit.
Here are some examples:
VR's front page says: Broquet International Limited is a UK Registered Company, which operates internationally from its Rugby headquarters in England. Rugby is close to Coventry, which is home to the Jaguar, Rover, Peugeot and Land Rover cars.
To that, we say, so what? Is it reasonable to try to gain some kudos by being close to respected names? If the device is that good, why don't those companies use the bloody things?
But, best of all, such a pro-British site could only be British, couldn't it?
Wrong.
Contact details are:
VR Fuel Savers Pvt Ltd / Sure-Connect
India
SCO 139 Sector 28 D
Chandigarh - 160022
Love Poms, those Indians do.
Copyright © 2008 Immortality Ltd
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